Roman Glass Jar with Trailing

£ 1,350.00

A fine Roman jar blown from pale blue glass although mostly covered by encrustation or iridescence now. The vessel features a bulbous body with shoulders that taper in and flare out to an everted mouth. The vessel sits upon a small, flat base. The jar is enriched with delicate trailing around the neck from the shoulder to the rim in a zigzag pattern.

Date: Circa 4th century AD
Provenance: From an important glass collection, London, UK, 1980-1990.
Condition: Very fine condition, encrustation to both the interior and exterior along with iridescence.

In stock

SKU: LD-908 Category: Tags: ,

By the 1st century AD, the technique of glass-blowing had revolutionised the art of glass-making. The new technique allowed craftsmen to use smaller amounts of glass for each vessel and obtain much thinner walls, so enabling the creation of small medicine, incense, and perfume containers in new forms. New shapes allowed greater control over the liquid dispensed, and glass was the material of choice for storing the oils because it was not porous. These small glass bottles are found frequently at Hellenistic and Roman sites, especially in cemeteries, and the perfumes which filled them would have been gathered from all corners of the expansive Roman Empire. Jars, such as this piece, were made through the glass blowing process, which involved using a hollow clay or metal tube to gather molten glass into a sphere. By blowing air inside it, the glass worker created a hollow sphere, which would have been then stretched with the aid of gravity and metal tools into the desired shape. The trailing on this piece would have been achieved by a single piece of molten glass, carefully administered – or ‘trailed’ – across the piece and adjusted with tweezers.

To find out more about Roman glass please see our relevant blog posts: Ancient Glass and Collecting Guide: Ancient Roman Glass

Weight 112 g
Dimensions W 7.5 x H 7.4 cm
Culture

Glass

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Region

Reference: For a similar item,The Metropolitan Museum, item 81.10.174

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